48

I recently posted this feature request a few days ago and haven't edited it for over two days, so I was surprised to see it at the top of the Active posts tab again, especially seeing that a moderator had modified the post without actually changing the text/tags. So I went to investigate the revision history...

At first sight, admittedly it looked quite comical, but after further thought this raised a few questions... Why was the post closed in the first place? Why did Community keep unlocking and instantly locking the post? Why did the moderators keep closing and reopening the post?

I know I've see a post similar to this somewhere (I can't find it at the moment), but I don't think Community kept instantly locking and unlocking the post in that one though.

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  • 44
    Skynet. Need I say more?
    – Cerbrus
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:19
  • 3
    I suspect your post was being migrated. Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:20
  • 1
    @MartijnPieters A Mod tried to migrate it, but couldn't. Would that have caused all this?
    – Sam
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:21
  • Exactly, and the migration failure causes the close/unlock/lock notice/reopen sequence. Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:22
  • 14
    @Cerbrus today, it's messing around with posts. Tomorrow, it's messing around with our killer flying drones. This is how it begins. Better get those fallout shelters ready...
    – user456814
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:23
  • @MartijnPieters Oh right. So the Mod had to close the post to migrate it, couldn't so Community locks/unlocks the post?
    – Sam
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:23
  • 2
    Sam, the mod gave a reason for the failure to migrate...
    – Cerbrus
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:23
  • @Cerbrus Yeah I know about that. I didn't know migrating it would have caused Community to lock/unlock it like that though.
    – Sam
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:24
  • Apparently, it does :P
    – Cerbrus
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:24
  • @Cerbrus So do you know why it has to lock/unlock it?
    – Sam
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:26
  • 13
    Does this mean Shog is really Kyle Reese, sent back in time from the near apocalyptic future to stop the Community User Machine Uprising?
    – user456814
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 8:26
  • 4
    @Cupcake +1 for the Terminator references :)
    – Jane S
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 9:38
  • @sam I'd guess it's the SE version of synchronized Commented Jun 24, 2014 at 0:11
  • @Cupcake Private Qarlo grumble Soldier - Ellison grumble. Commented Jun 25, 2014 at 0:36
  • 1
    Still waiting for Community to post something, hopefully on a site where I have rep to downvote. Commented Jun 25, 2014 at 6:05

1 Answer 1

54

As Brad Larson tells you on the post:

Unfortunately, you're blocked from asking questions on Meta.SE, so the system won't let me migrate this there. Nothing I can do about that.

Both he and Shog9* tried to migrate your post, but it was automatically bounced back. Normally a migrated post is locked in 'migrated away' mode, but because the migration fails, you see an immediate unlock being entered.

Because it all is automated and happens instantly, the Community User Lock and Unlock messages appear reversed in the edit history.

This is what normally happens when a post is migrated away, then later on rejected (because the post was closed on the other end):

enter image description here

What is missing in yours is the Post Migrated Away and Migration Rejected notices. There is no point, the migration failed.

* I guess Shog9 missed that Brad already had tried to do so.

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  • 24
    The sort order should probably be on datetime, id instead of datetime alone. This would disambiguate the order of rows with the same timestamp.
    – usr
    Commented Jun 23, 2014 at 10:03
  • 20
    It would also be nice if the migration code ran a preliminary "does it look like this could be migrated?" check before messing with the post history in any way. Yes, there would presumably need to be a second check due to race conditions, but that should rarely fail. Commented Jun 24, 2014 at 8:53
  • @IlmariKaronen: Still, that would probably invite bugs: Code that is not exercised is likely broken. Good examples: Multi-codepoint characters in Unicode, multi-codeunit codepoints in UTF-16. Commented Aug 1, 2014 at 14:02

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